Transforming An Economy Through Digitalization- The Ghana Story
Ladies and Gentlemen,
- Thank you very much for the opportunity to speak at Ashesi University this evening. This is one of the leading and most sought-after universities in Ghana and Africa. Congratulations to the founder and President, Patrick Awuah, to the faculty, staff and students for such an accomplishment in under 2 decades with all its teething challenges.
Today, I will be speaking about our economy. Notwithstanding the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on prices, government revenue and our debt levels, we have achieved so much over the last five years in areas such as: Creation of jobs: more than any government in the 4th Republic Reducing Inflation from 15% to near single digits Achieving the lowest exchange rate depreciation for any first term government in the 4th Republic, and most likely, the lowest exchange rate depreciation in 30 years by the end of the year Recorded positive trade balance in successive years; best in more than a decade Lowest average bank lending rates in the 4th Republic Safeguarding food security and fight against hunger through Planting for Food and Jobs Stimulating industrialization from the ground up through One District One Factory. More factories have been set up than under any other government in the history of Ghana. In addition to these indicators of the macroeconomy, we have
- Development Authorities - IPEP
- One Constituency One Ambulance
- Zongo Development Fund
- Initiated many social interventions to reduce hardships to the under-privileged in society.
- Managed the COVID-19 Pandemic by world class standards
- Introduced fundamental changes in building our human capital fit for our democracy and industrial development through Free SHS and Free TVET.
NATURE OF THE SYSTEM
Our “system” had major shortcomings and presented challenges for the digitalization of the economy. These challenges included the following: Citizens and Residents could not be uniquely Identified
We were operating in a system where most of the population could not be uniquely identified. It is possible to be born in Ghana, live a full life, die and be buried and there would be no trace of you on any documentation that you ever lived and died in this country. - The difficulty in obtaining identification documents by many created an industry for generating fake identities including drivers’ licenses and birth certificates.
- Difficulty in identifying accident victims at hospitals and contacting next of kin when they die. They are usually given mass burials without the knowledge of their relatives.
- Voter registration exercises are unnecessarily chaotic because people’s identities and ages are the subject of dispute.
Inefficiency and Corruption in the Delivery of Public Services
Inspite of all the efforts at reforms and decentralization, Ghana has a legacy problem in our public administration. For far too long, the public administration system which was meant to be an instrument of development has instead been characterised by cumbersome structures and procedures. These might have been fairly adequate in a colonial state with a “sluggish” centralized bureaucracy, rigid, rules-based, hierarchical chains of command, and highly interpersonal in its delivery of public services. In the day-to-day interactions of Ghanaians, whether in applying for driver’s license, passports and any form of government permit or license, at the local or national level, corruption has been so ingrained that bribe giving and taking are often tolerated to the point of being considered as normal behavior. The nature of our system is such that there is a built-in incentive for some public servants to make sure the system does not work. If the system does not work, these people will make money because people will find ways and means to get what they want. Other Challenges include:
- Lack of a functional National Property Address System
No modern economy can function without an address system.
- The existence of a large Informal Sector and the dominance of cash payments
- Our databases are largely manual and not integrated
- The difficulty in collecting taxes for development
The vast majority of the population do not file to pay taxes and there is no way of finding out.
- Inefficiency in the delivery of Health Services
- There is a predominance of manual records in the system.
- When it comes to buying drugs from pharmacies, patients face several challenges with the existing system.
- People in remote areas are not well-served
BUILDING A NEW SYSTEM FOR DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION
All the challenges I have described so far are symptomatic of the disconnect between our lives and government machinery. I concluded in the book that digitization was the path to modernizing and transforming the Ghanaian economy. We reaffirmed this in our 2016 Manifesto. The goal was to quickly transform our economy by leveraging on technological innovations as a means to leapfrog the development process, overcome legacy problems, and improve both economic and public sector governance. This is why digitization has been a major area of focus for our government. Unfortunately, many people still do not appreciate the link between digitization and economic development. I have heard some people ask why I have abandoned economics for digitization. Far from abandoning economics, the reality is that in this era, if you don’t digitize you will not have much of an economy, PERIOD! Indeed, digital policy is economic policy! The World Bank President, David Malpass, at the recently concluded G20 summit stated strongly just a few days ago that : “ Without digitalization, we wont be able to reap the full benefits of human progress. Digitalization is vital in transforming social services, finance, health, education, and agriculture”.
Also, the IMF’s March 2021 Annual Report notes that: “COVID-19… provides an opportunity for African countries to innovate and go digital. African countries will have to rebuild their economies. They should not merely repair them; they should remake them, with digitization leading the way”.
In Africa, Ghana has been ahead of the curve on digitization. Our strategy since 2017, has been not just to repair the “system” but to build a new “system” through digital transformation. What are the elements of this new system for digital transformation ? We want : - A system with unique identification numbers for the population
- A system with addresses for all properties and locations
- A system that is transparent, and promotes accountability, discipline and trustworthiness.
- A system that is inclusive and not based on who you know
- A system that provides efficient public services delivery and tackles corruption
- A system that improves efficiency in the health sector
- A system that provides financial inclusion and a cash-lite economy
- A system that addresses high interest rates
- A system that enhances domestic revenue mobilization
HOW HAS DIGITIZATION ADDRESSED THE ISSUE OF PROVIDING UNIQUE IDENTITY TO THE POPULATION?
On coming into office, we moved quickly with the issuance of biometric national ID cards (The Ghanacard) to the population. The Ghanacard project was initiated by President Kufuor but abandoned for 8 years. The card has world class features. It captures 10 fingerprints as well as the iris of individuals. It is also consistent with the ECOWAS standards and bears the ECOWAS logo. It is compatible with any reader which is compliant with EMV contactless communication protocol. This means that the Ghanacard will be recognized as an e-passport and can be read and verified in all ICAO compliant borders (in 197 countries and 44,000 airports in the world). When this happens, holders of the Ghanacard will be allowed to board any flight to Ghana. Furthermore, the good news for diasporan Ghanaians is that when the Ghana Immigration Service is linked to the NIA architecture diasporan Ghanaians who hold the Ghanacard should not have to obtain visas to travel to Ghana. We expect this to be operational by the end of the first quarter of next year. Ghana is one of the few countries in the world where the national ID card is also an e-passport. The Ghanacard is also being linked with existing passports so that travel history will be preserved. The Ghanacard is already valid for travel to all ECOWAS countries. I should note that the national ID project was executed by the NIA in collaboration with a world class Ghanaian private sector firm, (IMS) Margins. So proud of them. HOW HAS DIGITIZATION SOLVED THE PROBLEM OF A PROPERTY ADDRESS SYSTEM FOR GHANA?
To solve the problem of a lack of working address system in the country we have leveraged on GPS technology to implement a digital address system for Ghana capturing every square inch of land. In the process, we have identified and provided unique addresses for all properties in Ghana (7.5 million properties). The Land Use and Spatial Planning Authority (LUSPA) has also provided street names and house numbers for every street in Ghana. Government will affix the address plates for every property in Ghana and we expect the process to be completed by the end of 2022. Ghana is the first country in Africa to implement a digital system in combination with house numbers and street names. It is a superior address system and leapfrogs the addressing systems that have been implemented and in use in many advanced countries. With the digital property address system: - Every Ghanaian has a digital address. Can provide such an address for job applications, visa applications, application for passports, etc.
- The Ghana Post GPS application comes with directions to every location
- Currently Ghana Post is achieving 98% delivery rates as they can identify every location using the digital address navigation system. Now Ghana Post delivers for several e-commerce companies like Jumia and majority of shipments sent to Ghana via Alibaba and Amazon are delivered through Ghana Post. Ghana Post provides banks with data such as customers’ GPS address.
- The Ghanacard captures the digital address of the holder
- Ambulances and police can easily find locations to accidents and crime scenes.
Given the popularity of WhatsApp amongst people in finding and sharing locations, we engaged Google last year and they have agreed to integrate our digital address system (house number, street names and digital address) into Google Maps. We are hoping to complete the integration by the end of the year. This will be the first such integration of a country’s digital property address system into Google maps that I am aware of. The digital address system was executed by Ghanapost in collaboration with Vokacom, a leading Ghanaian IT firm. HOW IS DIGITIZATION ADDRESSING FINANCIAL INCLUSION AND THE DOMINANCE OF CASH PAYMENTS?
One of the biggest problems impeding financial sector development in developing countries is the issue of financial exclusion. This means that most of the population is excluded from fully participating in the financial system because they are unable to open and operate bank and financial services accounts. This reinforces the dominance of cash payments. When we assumed office in 2017, we decided to use digitization to solve this problem. The data showed that 70% of people in Ghana had no bank accounts but 80% of the adult population had mobile phones with 30 million mobile money accounts. It was also not possible to send money to customers of different telecom companies. So we asked the questions: why can’t we make it possible to send mobile money across different telecom companies and also why can’t the mobile money account function like a bank account ‘by making it interoperable with bank accounts? The answer to these questions was the implementation of the ground-breaking mobile money interoperability system. Thanks to the Bank of Ghana and Ghana Interbank Payments and Settlement System (GhIPSS) the mobile money payments interoperability has made it possible to transfer money seamlessly across different mobile money providers and between bank accounts and mobile wallets. It has also solved the major problem of the over 70% of people not having bank accounts. Today, because of mobile money interoperability (MMI), you can transfer money from a customer of one telco to a customer of a different telco and also make payments from your mobile money account into any bank account and you can receive payments from any bank account into your mobile money account. You can receive interest on savings, acquisition of loan (e.g. qwick loan) on your mobile wallets. As a result of MMI over 90% of the adult population now have access to a “bank account”. The digital payments infrastructure is boosting e-commerce in Ghana. Business is now taking place over Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, etc. Many people who cannot afford to rent or build shops are able to do business on the internet at little cost with deliveries helped by digital address and payments using mobile money interoperability. Ghana has therefore put itself in a position to grow e-commerce and create jobs. I am told by industry players that thanks to the reforms we have implemented, by next year, Ghanaians will be able to shop online with global online giants like Amazon using mobile money. The Mobile money interoperability, Universal QR CODE and other payment system reforms were implemented by the Bank of Ghana and the Ghana Interbank Payment and Settlement Service (GHIPSS) in collaboration with the banks and Telecom companies. HOW IS DIGITIZATION ADDRESSING THE ISSUE OF EFFICIENT PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY AND CORRUPTION?
Our approach to improving the delivery of public services is to minimize human contact as much as possible. Therefore we embarked on an aggressive digitization of the processes of service delivery across many public institutions: The SIM cards database will also be integrated. Apart from the demands of law enforcement, it also makes sense to register and link our SIM cards with the Ghanacard because most people who operate in the informal sector have mobile phones and use mobile money. Mobile money is susceptible to money laundering and therefore we need a higher Know Your Customer (KYC) requirement since the mobile money account now functions like a bank account. Also, digital lending through mobile phones is susceptible to high default if people can just throw away their SIM card after obtaining a loan. Additionally, given the linkage of the National ID card with Passport, DVLA, SSNIT, GRA, NHIS, Births and Deaths, CAGD etc., SIM card re-registration using the Ghanacard will help in the formalization of the economy by encouraging people in the informal sector to get a Ghanacard. HOW IS DIGITIZATION ADDRESSING THE ISSUE OF DOMESTIC REVENUE MOBILIZATION?
Ghana has a major challenge in the area of domestic revenue mobilization. The tax/GDP ratio is 14.3% compared to 27% for South Africa and 34% for the advanced (OECD) countries. Most adults are outside the tax net and compliance is very low. At the beginning of 2017, only 4% of the adult population of Ghana had Tax Identification Numbers (TIN). Indeed, a recent study by the World Bank (November 2020) estimates inter alia that potential tax revenues from sole proprietors, who usually operate in the informal sector, amounted to 12.6 percent of GDP. Broadening the tax net is therefore imperative. In this regard, a number of digital initiatives have been implemented to broaden the tax base and create a vehicle for enhanced domestic revenue mobilization. These include: - Ghanacard – With the designation of the Ghanacard number as the TIN number we have increased the percentage of adults with TIN numbers from 4% to 86%
- From the TIN database, we can tell who has filed their taxes and who has not filed at the end of each year.
- Digital Address System
- Financial Inclusion and the move towards electronic payments (and away from cash) as well as the integration of databases provides more transparency and accountability.
- The formalization of the informal sector through digitalization will expand the tax base.
Digitization of the tax filing process: Many people, including highly educated people, find the process of filing taxes complex. To make it easier and less cumbersome to file taxes, I challenged the GRA last year to come up with a simple to use mobile App to enable ordinary people file and pay taxes using their mobile phones. I am happy to announce that the GRA has completed the just completed that mobile App. The mobile tax filing application is available on the Ghana.Gov Mobile App (which is available on Google Playstore or Apple App Store). The tax filing Mobile App has been designed specifically to make the filing of taxes very simple. Once you sign on, you will be asked to answer a number of simple questions. Once completed, you can hit the send button and your tax liability or refund will be calculated. You can then proceed to pay using momo, GhQR Code, Gh-Link, etc. You will receive an electronic receipt of your tax payment. You can also apply for and obtain an electronic tax clearance certificate. National Common Platform for Property Tax Administration: Tax is paid on only 9% of properties in Ghana. An average of GH¢ 38.2 million is collected annually for property taxes in Ghana. An effective property tax regime requires that we are able to: - Identify all properties
- Assess the value of all properties
- Identify and maintain a property owners database
- Send Bill to Owners
- Enforce payment of taxes
Over the last two years, Government has been working on providing a solution to this problem through digitization. Thanks to the hard work of the Ministers for Local Government and Rural Development as well as Lands and Natural Resources with support from the Minister for Finance, we have developed a National Common Platform for Property Tax Administration for Ghana which will operate across all MMDAs. The Platform is integrated with the NIA database, Digital Property Address System and the Ghana.Gov. Platform. The Platform can: - Generate and monitor the distribution of bills (digitally and via hand delivery)
- Provide Real Time Returns information (revenue performance and data collection returns)
- Provide MLGRD (full) and the MMDAs (limited) real time access and visibility to performance data (valuation rolls updates, billing, collections etc).
- Provide Real Time Information to General Public/Rate Payers
- Any homeowner can pay property taxes using their mobile phone.
The Platform is ready and is expected to be implemented by the Ministry of Local Government in 2022. HOW IS DIGITILIZATION ADDRESSING THE ISSUE OF HIGH INTEREST RATES?
A significant driver of high interest rates in Ghana is the level of risk associated with lending. The issues that pertain to risk include the absence of a unique identity for the population and the lack of an address system. Ghana’s digitization program, by achieving unique identity and providing unique addresses for properties should result in lower interest rates as the risk associated with bank lending would have been reduced. Thanks to the excellent monetary policy stance of the Bank of Ghana, bank lending rates have been on the decline from an average of 32% in 2016 to an average of 21% currently. One can expect further reductions as the full impact of digitization kicks in. Furthermore, starting October 1, 2021, the Bank of Ghana has directed banks, telecommunications companies, Fintechs, mobile money operators, utility providers, retailers, government institutions that offer credit to MSMEs, institutions that provide identification documents, entities that supply goods and services on a post-paid or installment basis, student loan schemes, etc. to provide information on credit behaviour of their clients to the Credit Reporting System. This is critical for assessing risk by lenders and will help drive down interest rates and enhance repayments by borrowers. HOW IS DIGITIZATION IMPROVING THE EFFICIENCY OF HEALTHCARE DELIVERY?
Digitization of Hospitals and Medical Records: Before Government commenced its systematic digitization of medical records at the public health facilities, all records and documents were paper-based. The process of locating patients’ files was cumbersome and documents sometimes were misplaced or misfiled. This caused delays and inefficiencies in the delivery of health services and reluctance of some sick people to visit public health facilities. This effort has increased efficiency, effectiveness and productivity in service delivery by our health facilities, eliminating the need for queues and delays and also increasing access to health care by those who need the services most. Henceforth, the medical records and history of patients will be gathered under a single digital database which can be accessed by any networked hospital when patients visit. We have also embarked on the connection of health facilities under the Ghana Health Service (GHS) on to one digital platform. So far, all teaching hospitals and all regional hospitals have been connected and can talk to each other. Thirty-six health facilities in the Central region have also been connected to the digital platform in a pilot scheme. So now if you are referred from a hospital like Tamale Teaching Hospital to Korle-bu Teaching Hospital in Accra, you do not need to carry a folder… all your records will be seen and monitored by the doctor in Korle Bu when you arrive. Patients will have only one digital folder wherever they go. The E-Pharmacy will enable Ghana address the issue of drug abuse. Those prescribed controlled drugs like Tramadol for example will only be given a one-time CODE sent via SMS (once the prescription is uploaded) to use at the pharmacy. The e-pharmacy platform will also check fake or counterfeit drugs because the platform will be linked to the FDA which will monitor the batch numbers of all products real time. Any drug for which the FDA does not have a batch number will be classified as fake. The E-Pharmacy is scheduled to be launched before the end of the year. This will make Ghana the first country in sub-Saharan Africa to have a national scale E-Pharmacy and one of only a few countries in the world with a national scale E-pharmacy. I would like to thank the Pharmacy Council and the Ghanaian private partners for being very proactive and for tolerating my hounding. HOW IS DIGITIZATION ADDRESSING PUBLIC SECURITY AND SAFETY?
In many advanced countries, the pervasiveness of CCTV cameras imposes some restraint on potential criminals. You are likely to be caught if you break the law. This is why we have installed 10,000 CCTV cameras since 2017. The cameras have helped the police to solve a number of crimes such as the arrest of suspects in a recent bullion van robbery. At the beginning of 2017 we only had 800 CCTV cameras in operation. - A system based on integrated (centralized) data
- A system with unique identification numbers for the population
- A system with addresses for all properties and locations
- A system that is transparent, and promotes accountability, discipline and trustworthiness.
- A system that is inclusive.
- A system that minimizes corruption in the delivery of public services
- A system where the operations of government institutions are digitized for efficient service delivery
- A system that is formalizing the informal sector
- A system that is reducing the cash dominance in economic transactions
- A system that has broadened the tax base and built the vehicle for domestic revenue mobilization
- A system where the credit reference agencies will be effective
- A system that supports law enforcement
- A system where healthcare is accessible to people in remote areas.
This will generate significant time savings for citizens in obtaining government services like acquiring passport, driver’s licence, NHIS card, and the savings in time can be used for other productive activities.
Ladies and Gentlemen, the reason why things appear to work in the developed countries is because many of these systems are in place. There is no reason to think that they are more honest and disciplined than we are. They are not. Rather, they have systems that elicit honesty, discipline transparency and accountability. These are the systems we are also putting in place in Ghana. It has taken political will on the part of Government to put these new systems in place because of the resistance by beneficiaries of the status quo. Furthermore, there is little immediate political benefit from implementing these new systems. It takes some time for the full benefits of digitalization to manifest, however politicians generally cannot afford to wait. The infrastructure we have put in place for digitalization is soft infrastructure. It is not like a road or a bridge you can point to. Thank you for your attention
God bless you and
God bless our homeland Ghana